The importance of food composition data has been recognized as far back as the 1940’s where UK based scientists McCance and Widdowson stated that “a knowledge of
the chemical composition of food is the first essential in dietary treatment of disease, or in any quantitative study of human nutrition.” This statement remains highly relevant in the present, and particularly in many African countries where the response
to complex problems of food insecurity, undernutrition, overweight/obesity and related non-communicable disease sequelae cannot be achieved without reliable food composition data. Yet, less than half of African countries have reliable up-to date food composition
tables.
Join this webinar to learn more on the collaborative effort between the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Nutrition, the Lilongwe University of Agriculture & Natural
Resources and the South African Medical Research Council to develop Malawi’s first food composition table/database. The FCT was developed through an extensive process of data gathering and compilation following methodology endorsed by the FAO/INFOODS international
network of food data systems.
Sanele Nkomani,
Supervising Dietitian for Malawi’s first Dietetics training program, based at the Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources (LUANAR) and supported by the Feed
the Future Innovation Lab for Nutrition
Averalda van Graan,
Research Manager of the South African Food Data System at the South African Medical Research Council, Lecturer at the University of Stellenbosch
Stevier Kaiyatsa, Economist at Ministry of Economic Planning and Development
in Malawi
William A. Masters, Investigator for the Innovation Lab for Nutrition, Professor
at Tufts University in the Friedman School of Nutrition in the Department of Economics
Kate Schneider, PhD Candidate in Food Policy and Applied Nutrition at the
Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University
Felix P. Phiri, Director of Nutrition in the Department of Nutrition, HIV
and AIDS, Ministry of Health, Malawi